SOCIETA' E CULTURE POSTCOLONIALI

Anno accademico
2023/2024 Programmi anni precedenti
Titolo corso in inglese
POSTCOLONIAL SOCIETY AND CULTURES
Codice insegnamento
LT2040 (AF:356601 AR:251554)
Modalità
In presenza
Crediti formativi universitari
6
Livello laurea
Laurea
Settore scientifico disciplinare
L-LIN/10
Periodo
II Semestre
Anno corso
3
Sede
VENEZIA
Spazio Moodle
Link allo spazio del corso
Il corso è insegnamento caratterizzante [B] dei percorsi letterario e culturale e politico internazionale della Laurea triennale in Lingue, civiltà e scienze del linguaggio

Students will be provided with a general overview of the main themes, concepts, and debates in contemporary postcolonial studies, with specific reference to literature. They will acquire a basic knowledge and understanding of postcolonial theory and its specialized language. They will be able to apply selected concepts, terms, and perspectives to literary and other cultural texts. They will be invited to develop independent thinking and judgment and will be encouraged to improve their communication skills in relation to the issues at stake. The final objective will be to enable students to address postcolonial literary texts from a theoretical perspective in a largely self-directed or autonomous manner, and to have a better understanding of the importance of migration in today's world.
Advanced reading, speaking and writing knowledge of English
POSTCOLONIAL VENICE There is a city that is far from England and at the same time occupies a central place on the map of the English – and Western - imaginary. From Shakespeare to Byron, from Ruskin to James, there is an uninterrupted literary tradition which has contributed to the Venice’s mythical status. This course explores an important alternative tradition that has explored, against the grain, the colonial and postcolonial subtexts of Venice, its involvement in global trade, its multicultural relations, its ethnic diversity, its cosmopolitan entanglements, ecological challenges, and racial histories. By way of a number of fiction, non-fiction, and poetry texts, we will be looking at Venice from a different vantage point, bringing a postcolonial perspective on one of the earliest western colonial powers.We will also be looking at other art forms, such as photography, Reggae music, and the visual arts, with special emphasis on how contemporary African artists have engaged with Venice to decolonize its imaginary and articulate novel visions of the city.
Primary texts
Amitav Ghosh, *Gun Island* (any edition, 2019)
Poems by Meena Alexander, Stephen Gray, Tony Mochama, Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o, Vikram Seth, Derek Walcott (available on the Moodle page)
Essays by Stanley Gazemba, Caryl Phillips, Maaza Mengiste, Igiaba Scego, Mayank Austen Soofi, Arnold Zable (available on the Moodle page)

Mandatory Critical Readings (available on the Moodle page)

Pramod K. Nayar, The Postcolonial Studies Dictionary. Chichester, UK: Wiley Blackwell, 2015 (excerpts).
Chantal J. Zabus (ed.), The Future of Postcolonial Studies, New York: Routledge, 2015: 1-16
Students will be asked to join reading groups, meeting regularly (in person or online) to discuss the texts. Their final mark will be based on a continuous assessment system based on three group assignments and a 90-minute final individual written exam where key passages from the readings.
Students who are unable to attend and cannot participate in the group work are required to write a final research paper (12.000-20.000 characters) based on a list of given topics and obligatory additional readings that will be made available on the Moodle page.

Lectures, class discussion, online activities. Students are required to attend regularly and to complete the assigned readings before each class.
Inglese
scritto

Questo insegnamento tratta argomenti connessi alla macroarea "Città, infrastrutture e capitale sociale" e concorre alla realizzazione dei relativi obiettivi ONU dell'Agenda 2030 per lo Sviluppo Sostenibile

Programma definitivo.
Data ultima modifica programma: 08/04/2023